Thoughts on Life, Love, Politics, Hypocrisy and Coming Out in Mid-Life

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Why We Need A Third Reconstruction in America

I am not sure what the symbolism might be, but I woke up during the night after having a dream where I and other family members were resistance fighters in Vichy France. The dream was disturbing and frustrating too since many in the dream were unconvinced of the evil being opposed. With waking and the coming of morning, a lesser but no less dangerous evil exists that must be opposed: the racism and right wing religious fanaticism that throughout America's history has typically walked hand in hand with racism and white supremacy. If post election exit polls and other surveys are to be believed, a last gasp of angry white voters upset about the loss of white privilege Christian reactionaries who continue to seek to force their beliefs on all citizens propelled Donald Trump to electoral victory (along perhaps with electronic vote hacking in three swing states). The take away from this circumstance is that the vast majority of registered voters - nearly 75% - who did not vote for Trump must oppose his agenda and push for what one writer at BillMoyers.com has called a third Reconstruction in America. Here are article highlights:

The
reactionary wave that swept across America with the election of Donald Trump is
not an anomaly in our history. It is an all-too-familiar pattern in the long
struggle for American reconstruction.

The story of our struggle for freedom is not linear: Every
advance toward a more perfect union has been met with a backlash of resistance.

When African-Americans became full citizens of the United
States during Reconstruction, a violent backlash arose in the Redemption
movement that included both the violence of the Klan and the voter suppression
of Southern Democrats. The same kind of backlash followed the legislative
victories of the civil rights movement — what many historians call a “Second
Reconstruction.” Richard Nixon’s “law and order” campaign of 1968 was an
intentional effort to appeal to racial hate and fear without using overtly
racist language. His adviser, Kevin Phillips, called it the “Southern
Strategy.”

Donald Trump’s unanticipated victory could not have been
possible without the election of Barack Obama as America’s first
African-American president. Trump entered national politics by waging a crusade
against the possibility of Obama’s citizenship. It proved to be the perfect way
to touch the psychic wound of so many Americans who have not faced our legacy
of racism. Anyone familiar with the Mississippi Plan of 1876 or the Southern
Strategy of 1968 can be surprised only by the ease with which Trump adapted
them for the 21stcentury.

Trump’s attacks on immigrants, Muslims and the LGBTQ
community were political ploys based on the fundamental racial fear at the
heart of the American experience. When he told white Americans that he was
their last chance to make America great again, he was touching a wound passed
down since the lost cause religion of the 19thcentury.

If we are willing to see ourselves as we are and have
been, we will also see our potential for prophetic resistance, even in times
like these. For we are also the heirs of great dissenters who’ve
stood for right even when they were a minority of one. When the Jim Crow laws
of the solid South were upheld by the US Supreme Court in the case ofPlessy v. Ferguson, only one justice — John Harlan of
Kentucky — dissented. But his dissenting opinion laid the legal groundwork upon
which Thurgood Marshall built his case over half a century later inBrown v. Board of Education.

When Woodrow Wilson showedBirth of a Nationat the White House a century ago,
W.E.B. DuBois, Ida B. Wells and the interracial NAACP challenged the most
powerful man in America to face his racism.

Less than a majority of Americans elected a mortal, not a
god, when they cast their ballots for Donald Trump. . . . Across lines
of division, we can continue to build the moral coalition that is already a
majority in this country. We can and must face the race and class question
together and not as separate issues.

Yes, we have some difficult days ahead.. . . Our work continues: we
must work together for a Third Reconstruction in America.

Many Republican "friends" vehemently deny the racism that motivated their votes. Not coincidentally, many of them still cling to a near fundamentalist form of Christianity that, if one looks at America's history, has always been in lock step with white supremacy. Lest we forget, the Southern Baptists came into being over the issue of slavery and religious arguments that blacks were inferior and not equal to whites. Why do we pretend that much of this toxicity no longer exists throughout that denomination and so many of the other Christian fundamentalist sects? #NotMyPresident

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Out gay attorney in a committed relationship; formerly married and father of three wonderful children; sometime activist and political/news junkie; survived coming out in mid-life and hope to share my experiences and reflections with others.
In the career/professional realm, I am affiliated with Caplan & Associates PC where I practice in the areas of real estate, estate planning (Wills, Trusts, Advanced Medical Directives, Financial Powers of Attorney, Durable Medical Powers of Attorney); business law and commercial transactions; formation of corporations and limited liability companies and legal services to the gay, lesbian and transgender community, including birth certificate amendment.

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